[opendtv] FCC Accelerates Tuner Deadline, All Right

  • From: "John Shutt" <shuttj@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "OpenDTV" <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 10 Jun 2005 14:45:23 -0400

Filed under "be careful what you wish for."

John

http://www.tvtechnology.com/dailynews/one.php?id=3008

Date posted: 2005-06-10

FCC Accelerates Tuner Deadline, All Right
The FCC unanimously denied a petition by the Consumer Electronic Association 
to alter the integrated tuner deadline--sort of.


The CEA asked the FCC to get rid of the deadline when half of mid-sized TVs 
would be required to have integrated digital broadcast (ATSC) tuners, in 
exchange for moving the 100-percent deadline up four months. Instead, the 
FCC kept the 50-percent deadline and moved the 100-percent date up by four 
months.

Consequently, in three weeks, half of all TVs with 25- to 36-inch screens 
must have ATSC tuners, and all such sets will have to include the circuitry 
by March 1, 2006, instead of the previously established deadline of July 1, 
2006. (The tuner requirement does not apply to products that are "monitor 
only;" but to TVs that otherwise have analog broadcast reception 
capability.)

The commission also opened a Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to move 
the final deadline for smaller sets--13 inches and up--up by six months, 
from July 1, 2007, to Dec. 31, 2006. The notice also asks for comments about 
whether a tuner requirement should be extended to sets with screens smaller 
than 13 inches. The FCC reasoned that all smaller sets should include tuners 
by Dec. 31, 2006, because that is still the statutory end date of analog 
broadcasting. In a House bill that would extend that statute by two years, 
the tuner requirement for small sets would be moved up a full year, to July 
1, 2006.

The CEA wanted the halfway point on mid-sized sets ditched because it said 
the ATSC price premium drove away retailers, who are not subject to the FCC 
rule. ATSC reception currently adds about $100 to the price of a TV.

The first phase-in started July 1, 2004, when half of sets 36 inches and 
larger had to have ATSC reception. Eight months later, ATSC-capable sets in 
that size category comprised less than one-third of what reached showroom 
floors, according to a survey of ads in major metropolitan newspapers 
tracked by New York-based TV expert Mark Schubin. From the March 28 through 
June 3, of 1,237 ads for TVs 36 inches and larger, 387--31 percent--included 
ATSC tuners.

Those larger sets account for about 18 percent of sales to dealers, while 
the mid-sized category accounts for about 40 percent. Thus, CEA members fear 
being left with warehouses full of mid-sized ATSC sets.

CEA chief Gary Shapiro nonetheless put on a brave face after the ruling, 
"commending" the FCC for moving up the overall deadline, but expressing 
disappointment over having the halfway point retained. In the same 
statement, dire warnings were issued over the accelerated deadline for 
smaller sets.

"Even if manufacturers were able to meet such a severely foreshortened 
production schedule, an earlier timeframe could result in cost increases 
that the marketplace cannot sustain," the CEA said. "For smaller sets, 13- 
to 26- inches, the requirement would double the development costs for 
manufacturers, as well as double the price of a typical 13-inch television 
to consumers."

At least one consumer electronics manufacturer jumped to embrace the FCC 
action. TTE, the TV-making joint venture of Thomson and Chinese appliance 
giant TCL Corp., is in the process of rolling out a line of low-priced 
(sub-$400) standard-def DTVs. Greg Bosler, executive vice president of the 
TTE North America Profit Center, said TTE was "eager" to complete the DTV 
transition and sell more of the cheaper sets. A $300 27-inch model, 
demonstrated on Capitol Hill in May, is due to hit the market later this 
year.

The National Association of Broadcasters was predictably keen on the tuner 
decision, having endured a recent barrage of CEA flack over what it 
considers the paltry amount of people who rely exclusively on over-the-air 
broadcasting. (In the name of full disclosure, that includes one TV 
Technology editor.)

"With today's decision, the FCC validates that the 'tuner mandate' is a 
powerful pro-consumer mechanism for moving the digital television transition 
forward," NAB President and CEO Eddie Fritts said. "We salute Chairman 
Martin and other FCC commissioners for accelerating the original tuner 
schedule, and we strongly support the proposal to move up DTV tuner 
compliance for smaller TV sets."

The continued manufacture of analog sets only serves to delay the 
transition, he said. Analog television sets continue to outsell digital sets 
by roughly 4-to-1.




 
 
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